(ThyBlackMan.com) How many times, especially during or just after a tragedy like the killing of Eric Garner, have you heard one of our “leaders” angrily say, “Enough is enough”? They say it as if their angry rhetoric will scare the perpetrators and make them stop mistreating us. More importantly, I believe, they use these words to stir up Black folks to the point of being willing to follow them and do whatever they tell us to do. To that I say, “Enough is enough!”
The way we have digressed over the past few decades make it pretty clear that our toothless tiger leaders, our “big dog” organizations, and the shallow and often meaningless gestures by our celebrities and athletes have not taken us very far. We have failed to move beyond threatening rhetoric, empty promises, and no-win compromises; and we are being sold out by those who would have us believe they are leading us to victory.
They stand behind the microphones on stages, at press conferences, in pulpits, under the rubric of “Black Leader” or Black Spokesperson,” shouting and getting the troops “fired up and ready to go” with no roadmap, no plan, no end game, and no real strategy to accomplish our end. Then they disappear until the next crisis comes along, and we jump on their wheel-less bandwagon once again. They shout, “Enough is enough!” and we say “Yeah!” “That’s right!” and “You tell ‘em!”
It’s time we hold ourselves accountable for the declaration, “Enough is enough.” Do we need to be slapped just a little bit harder upside our heads for us to act more appropriately in response to our mistreatment and the myriad complaints we have lodged? Do we need one more person killed, even before we have resolved Eric Garner’s homicide? Do we need just one more march on Washington, in New York, and now in Cleveland, Ohio, before we truly mean “enough is enough”?
Just to shout out some tired phrases and walk away as if we accomplished something pragmatic is insulting and, quite frankly, cowardly. Bombastic rhetoric not followed by appropriate action is nothing but hot air and a waste of time and resources. Maybe that’s why many young people are so turned off by what they see and hear from “leaders.”
How are we going to make a real difference in the way we are treated if we don’t first change the way we respond to it? When we change our behavior, the perpetrators’ behavior will change. But right now we are so predictable, so shallow, and so vulnerable to “Rapolutionaries” and “Maach leaders.” We are willing to walk 130 miles because we think it will change what happened in Ferguson. We are willing to drive, fly, or ride a bus to Washington to “maach,” while along the way we spend thousands of dollars to get there, stay there, and eat there, only to leave no better off than we were before we left home.
Is enough really enough? I don’t think so. So what should we do to change our situation and gain a few victories along the way? Here’s one answer: Bob Law and a group of activists in New York City have put out a call for a period of redirecting Black dollars away from businesses that earn tremendous profits from Black consumers. They are calling it, “No Justice, No Profit.”
In response to what he calls “a blatant disregard and depraved indifference to Black life by many corporations,” Law wrote, “The Black community not only suffers at the hands of the police, [we] are the primary victims of the institutionalized racism that places the entire Black community in an economic and political choke hold.”
He went on to say, “One of the most effective ways to demand justice is to turn our consumer spending into real power and begin to target and control our spending. Let’s make where we spend our dollars a political decision. Let’s become Conscious Consumers.”
Bob Law has no soapbox, no pulpit, and no news conference with media that turn on his every word. His call, and it should be your call, says loudly and clearly that enough is truly enough, and here is what we are going to do to show we mean it this time. So what’s it going to be, New Yorkers? Another march, or some real economic and political action?
The other answer is the One Million Conscious Black Voters and Contributors. It is not merely a political effort; it is a major economic movement. If you want to see and be a part of a monumental effort and a positive solution that no one else is offering to Black people, you should join. But remember, the key word is “Conscious.” Send email to: info@iamoneofthemillion.com.
Written By James E. Clingman
Official website; http://www.blackonomics.com/
@James Davis: You want to know where all the “risk capital” – as you put it- is for the black community? It’s in the $11 billion that we black folk collectively give to our churches annually.
So, it’s not like we don’t have the capital. We just choose to piss it away donating to churches and other religious organizations where we see ZERO financial returns as a group.
Pretty savvy, huh?
“Enough is Enough! (In other words ,,, we have had it with these kind of people)” should apply to anyone who tackles black economic development and do not pose the tough questions needed to achieve that objective.
I could not agreed with you more that black people need a plan to evolve from being a 99% consumer to a producer or manufacturer. So what are the logical questions one must ask him or herself in the process of formulating such a plan to accomplish that goal.
#1) To accomplish such a goal, blacks are going to need money or risk capital. The majority population are not geniuses when it comes to creating businesses. However, what they have is something that they deny blacks and that is money or seed money or risk capital which they can call upon and use to pursue their business ambitions.
Thus, blacks have to ask the question, where is the risk capital in large enough amounts for blacks to use to start businesses?
#2) Once that question has been answered and blacks access that risk capital and start some successful businesses – the next question that has to be tackled and consummately answered is from where will secondary funding come to expand those successful businesses? It’s a dummy or an idiot who believes once blacks start successful businesses in great numbers that there will not be some push back from racists in the majority population. It has happened in the recent past and it should be anticipated.
Our world and I mean it when I say it is our world too, is beautiful and challenging! However it’s greatest and most tasteful fruits remain out of the reach of blacks as a whole not because we are not trying hard enough, but because of shallow thinking. Realistically answer the questions above and we take our first steps toward success in this endeavor.
It is not beyond our reach if it is not beyond our ability to conceive it. We simply have to make that which we conceive functional.
http://www.thefixthistime.com
Good article, deals with accountability for everyone, not the blame game.